Hong Kong, mainland Chinese law enforcement team-up in crackdown on illegal immigration
Officers seized one boat during the operation.
Authorities targeted illegal workers in the city, arresting six mainlanders and 18 others for breaching conditions of stay.
Four men and three women, aged 41 to 66, were taken into custody on suspicion of employing illegal workers.
The Immigration Department said it would continue to collaborate with police and other government bodies to combat illegal immigration.
Hong Kong police arrest 2 Indian nationals over illegal entry after ID check
Hong Kong and mainland authorities previously conducted a three-day cross-border operation, code-named “Mungoshunt-3”, in early November that led to the arrest of 127 people in the two-pronged attack targeting people smuggling.
Authorities in Guangdong on Friday said the recent rounds of arrests marked a “significant decline” from the 57 people they took into custody during the earlier operation.
Hong Kong authorities arrested 1,241 suspected illegal immigrants in the first 10 months of this year. A breakdown of the figure showed 968 were non-ethnic Chinese and 273 were from the mainland.
In comparison, 482 non-Chinese and 673 mainlanders were arrested last year.
Rise in flights behind illegal immigrant wave into Hong Kong: security chief
Secretary for Security Chris Tang Ping-keung recently told lawmakers that this year’s uptick could be attributed to increasingly convenient travel routes to the mainland and “rumours inducing illegal immigrants to come to Hong Kong”.
The minister earlier told the Post that many entrants hoped to claim non-refoulement protection, an assurance that asylum seekers will not be sent to a country where they may be persecuted or tortured.
While Tang had also said the government had a duty to process such claims in line with a high standard of fairness, he stressed that only about 1 per cent of applications had been approved since 2014.